217 lines
5.9 KiB
Markdown
217 lines
5.9 KiB
Markdown
---
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id: loops
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title: Iteration
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---
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import Syntax from '@theme/Syntax';
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## General Iteration
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<Syntax syntax="pascaligo">
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General iteration in PascaLIGO takes the shape of general loops, which
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should be familiar to programmers of imperative languages as "while
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loops". Those loops are of the form `while <condition> <block>`. Their
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associated block is repeatedly evaluated until the condition becomes
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true, or never evaluated if the condition is false at the start. The
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loop never terminates if the condition never becomes true. Because we
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are writing smart contracts on Tezos, when the condition of a "while"
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loops fails to become true, the execution will run out of gas and stop
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with a failure anyway.
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Here is how to compute the greatest common divisors of two natural
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numbers by means of Euclid's algorithm:
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```pascaligo group=a
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function gcd (var x : nat; var y : nat) : nat is
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block {
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if x < y then {
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const z : nat = x;
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x := y; y := z
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}
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else skip;
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var r : nat := 0n;
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while y =/= 0n block {
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r := x mod y;
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x := y;
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y := r
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}
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} with x
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```
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You can call the function `gcd` defined above using the LIGO compiler
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like so:
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```shell
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ligo run-function
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gitlab-pages/docs/language-basics/src/loops/gcd.ligo gcd '(2n*2n*3n*11n, 2n*2n*2n*3n*3n*5n*7n)'
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# Outputs: +12
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```
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</Syntax>
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<Syntax syntax="cameligo">
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CameLIGO is a functional language where user-defined values are
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constant, therefore it makes no sense in CameLIGO to feature loops,
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which we understand as syntactic constructs where the state of a
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stopping condition is mutated, as with "while" loops in PascaLIGO.
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Instead, CameLIGO loops are written by means of a tail recursive function
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Here is how to compute the greatest common divisors of two natural
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numbers by means of Euclid's algorithm:
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```cameligo group=a
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let rec iter (x,y : nat * nat) : nat =
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if y = 0n then x else iter (y, x mod y)
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let gcd (x,y : nat * nat) : nat =
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let x,y = if x < y then y,x else x,y in
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iter (x,y)
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```
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> Note that `fold_while`, `stop` and `continue` (now `Loop.resume`) are
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> *deprecated*.
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You can call the function `gcd` defined above using the LIGO compiler
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like so:
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```shell
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ligo run-function
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gitlab-pages/docs/language-basics/src/loops/gcd.mligo gcd (2n*2n*3n*11n, 2n*2n*2n*3n*3n*5n*7n)'
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# Outputs: +12
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```
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</Syntax>
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<Syntax syntax="reasonligo">
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ReasonLIGO is a functional language where user-defined values are
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constant, therefore it makes no sense in ReasonLIGO to feature loops,
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which we understand as syntactic constructs where the state of a
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stopping condition is mutated, as with "while" loops in PascaLIGO.
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Instead, ReasonLIGO loops are written by means of tail recursive functions
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Here is how to compute the greatest common divisors of two natural
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numbers by means of Euclid's algorithm:
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```reasonligo group=a
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let rec iter = ((x,y) : (nat, nat)) : nat =>
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if (y == 0n) { x; } else { iter ((y, x mod y)); };
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let gcd = ((x,y) : (nat, nat)) : nat => {
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let (x,y) = if (x < y) { (y,x); } else { (x,y); };
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iter ((x,y))
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};
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```
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> Note that `fold_while`, `stop` and `continue` (now `Loop.resume`) are
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> *deprecated*.
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</Syntax>
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<Syntax syntax="pascaligo">
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## Bounded Loops
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In addition to general loops, PascaLIGO features a specialised kind of
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*loop to iterate over bounded intervals*. These loops are familiarly
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known as "for loops" and they have the form `for <variable assignment>
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to <upper bound> <block>`, as found in imperative languages.
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Consider how to sum the natural numbers up to `n`:
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```pascaligo group=c
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function sum (var n : nat) : int is block {
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var acc : int := 0;
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for i := 1 to int (n) block {
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acc := acc + i
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}
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} with acc
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```
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(Please do not use that function: there exists a closed form formula.)
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You can call the function `sum` defined above using the LIGO compiler
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like so:
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```shell
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ligo run-function
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gitlab-pages/docs/language-basics/src/loops/sum.ligo sum 7n
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# Outputs: 28
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```
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PascaLIGO "for" loops can also iterate through the contents of a
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collection, that is, a list, a set or a map. This is done with a loop
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of the form `for <element var> in <collection type> <collection var> <block>`,
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where `<collection type>` is any of the following keywords:
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`list`, `set` or `map`.
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Here is an example where the integers in a list are summed up.
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```pascaligo group=d
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function sum_list (var l : list (int)) : int is block {
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var total : int := 0;
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for i in list l block {
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total := total + i
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}
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} with total
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```
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You can call the function `sum_list` defined above using the LIGO compiler
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like so:
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```shell
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ligo run-function
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gitlab-pages/docs/language-basics/src/loops/collection.ligo sum_list
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'list [1;2;3]'
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# Outputs: 6
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```
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Here is an example where the integers in a set are summed up.
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```pascaligo group=d
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function sum_set (var s : set (int)) : int is block {
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var total : int := 0;
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for i in set s block {
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total := total + i
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}
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} with total
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```
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You can call the function `sum_set` defined above using the LIGO compiler
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like so:
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```shell
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ligo run-function
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gitlab-pages/docs/language-basics/src/loops/collection.ligo sum_set
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'set [1;2;3]'
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# Outputs: 6
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```
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Loops over maps are actually loops over the bindings of the map, that
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is, a pair key-value noted `key -> value` (or any other
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variables). Given a map from strings to integers, here is how to sum
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all the integers and concatenate all the strings.
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Here is an example where the keys are concatenated and the values are
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summed up.
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```pascaligo group=d
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function sum_map (var m : map (string, int)) : string * int is block {
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var string_total : string := "";
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var int_total : int := 0;
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for key -> value in map m block {
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string_total := string_total ^ key;
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int_total := int_total + value
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}
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} with (string_total, int_total)
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```
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You can call the function `sum_map` defined above using the LIGO compiler
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like so:
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```shell
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ligo run-function
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gitlab-pages/docs/language-basics/src/loops/collection.ligo sum_map
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'map ["1"->1; "2"->2; "3"->3]'
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# Outputs: ( "123", 6 )
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```
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</Syntax> |